CONSTITUTION ACT, 1668

An Act for the peaceful establishment of institutions for the exercising of the sovereign powers of Korolev Senior Secondary School; and for purposes connected therewith

Whereas the sovereign is founded upon principles that recognize the supremacy of the rule of law:

And whereas the institutions of the sovereign would conduce to the welfare of the students, school and society at large, and promote the interests of Eternia and the continent of Candor:

And whereas on the establishment of such institutions, not only that the constitution of the legislative authority be provided for, but also the nature of the executive government and the procession of the judiciary unit therein be declared:

And whereas the holistic result is the provision of a wonderful formative experience for all students:

Short title

1. This Act may be cited as the Constitution Act.

Institutions

2. The provisions of this Act referring to the institutions shall be construed as referring to the institutions of the sovereign in which the powers of the sovereign are exercised by.

Korolev Senior

3. Unless it is otherwise expressed or implied, the name Korolev Senior shall be taken to mean Korolev Senior Secondary School as constituted under this act.

Geographic, physical jurisdiction

4. Korolev Senior shall be the privately-built school, bounded by the privately-owned land belonging to Eternia, provisioned to the Korolev Senior Faculty Administration, located in general in Hunghom, Livia, Central, Auxiria.

Census

5. In the general census of the population of Korolev Senior is hereby required to be taken every year before the start of the school year, in order for the numbers to be distinguished for the purposes connected therewith.

Continuity of the Faculty

6. The appropriate authority of and over Korolev Senior, as provisioned by the Board of Public Education or an equivalent authority of the relevant jurisdiction, is to continue to be vested in the Faculty, and shall remain inalienable therein.

Student Government

7. There shall be a general Student Government of Korolev Senior to exercise the sovereign’s powers, consisting of the Student Council, the Legislature, and the Council of Six, the powers therein being delegated to these student institutions.

Constitution of the Student Council

8. There shall be a Student Council of Korolev Senior to aid and advise the Student Government of Korolev Senior, consisting of: the Student Council Executives, representing the Student Council and the general Student Government; the Department of the Treasury; the Department of the Administration; the Student Liaison Office; and the Independent Commission Against Corruption.

Student Council Executives and its Offices

9. The Student Council Executives consist of the leadership of the Student Council which occupies the following offices: the Office of the President for the Student Council President; the Office of the Treasurer for the Chancellor of the Exchequer; the Office of the Secretary for the Undersecretary; the Office-General for the Executive Manager, and any other Deputies Without Portfolio, appointed as the President sees fit, to reasonably carry out his duties; all of which shall be responsible to the Office of the President.

All powers under Acts to be exercised by the Student Council

10. All powers, authorities, and functions which under any Act of the Assembly, or any Proclamation of the Faculty, are vested in or exercisable by the Student Council or adjutants thereof.

Responsibility of the Treasury

11. Where the Office of the Treasurer is responsible, there shall be a Department of the Treasury, to be responsible for the implementation of fiscal policy of the student institutions; and student organizations and functions, events or occasions thereof.

Responsibility of the Administration

12. Where the Office of the Secretary is responsible, there shall be a Department of the Administration, to be responsible for the record-keeping of transactions of any nature of all student organizations; and the petitioning for redress of grievances.

Responsibility of the Student Liaison Office

13. Where the Office-General is responsible, there shall be a Student Liaison Office, to be responsible for the general management of student organizations and functions, events or occasions thereof.

Responsibility of the Independent Commission Against Corruption

14. There shall be an Independent Commission Against Corruption, to be responsible for the oversight of the work of the Student Government with regards to the principle of good government.

Appointment of Offices

15. The Office of the President is elected to by universal suffrage of the student population, completed before the start of the school year, for a term length extending to the end of the school year; the Office of the Treasurer, the Office of the Secretary, and the Office-General, when vacant, is appointed to by the President, for a term length extending to the end of the school year.

Executive order of precedence

16. In case of invalidity of the Office of the President, the order of precedence is: the Chancellor of the Exchequer; the Undersecretary; and then the Executive Manager.

Constitution of the Legislature

17. There shall be one Legislature, consisting of an upper house styled the Senate, and a lower house styled the Assembly.

Privileges of the Legislature

18. The privileges, immunities, and powers to be held, enjoyed, and exercised by the Assembly and the Senate, and by the members thereof respectively, shall be such as are from time to time defined by Act of the Assembly or Proclamation of the Faculty respectively, as it pertains to the following, with regards to its respective assembly:

(a). the regulation of its own internal affairs;

(b). the authority to maintain the attendance and service of its Members;

(c). the power to discipline;

(d). the right to institute inquiries and to call witnesses and demand papers;

(e). the right to administer oaths to witnesses appearing before it;

(f). the right to publish papers without recourse to the courts.

Constitution of the Senate

19. The Senate shall consist of the teachers of the third-year classes of the school year, who shall be styled as Senators.

Tenure of the Senate

20. The Senate is summoned upon the start of the school year, and its term ends at the end thereof.

Quorum of the Senate

21. The presence of at least one half, and added the remainder after division, shall be necessary to constitute a meeting of the Senate for the exercising of its powers.

Voting in the Senate

22. Questions arising in the Senate shall be decided by a majority of voices, and when the voices are equal the decision shall be deemed to be in the negative.

Constitution of the Assembly

23. The Assembly consists of two constituencies, the Class Constituencies and the Functional Constituencies, of which their members are styled as Members of the Assembly.

Class Constituencies

24. At the first summon of the Assembly, it shall consist of Class Constituencies of: forty students from Class 3-A; twenty students from Class 3-B; ten students from Class 3-C; five students from Class 3-D; three students from Class 3-E; and one student from Class 3-F, if and as such classes exist, named and appointed by the respective classes.

Functional Constituencies

25. The Assembly shall consist of Functional Constituencies of the following categories:

(a). the Class Representatives of each third-year class;

(b). the Presidents of School Clubs as sanctioned by the Senate;

(c). the Student Council Executives, and up to four Deputies Without Portfolio;

Simultaneous qualifications of an Assembly Member

26. For any student qualifying to multiple seats in the Assembly in any manner, must declare their one seat to remain in, and declare all other seats invalid, starting with seats in the Functional Constituencies.

Speaker of the Assembly

27. The Speaker of the Assembly shall be a Member from the Student Council Executives Functional Constituency.

Speaker to preside

28. The speaker shall preside at all conventions of the Assembly.

Provision in case of absence of the Speaker

29. If the Speaker is excused in advance, or absent for any other reason for a period of one hour to a convention of the Assembly, the Student Council Executive Functional Constituency may appoint one of its members to act as Speaker, and if such an arrangement is not possible, then one may be elected from the Assembly; and such a Member should have and execute all the powers, privileges and duties of Speaker.

Tenure of the Assembly

30. The Assembly is summoned at the start of the school year, and shall continue until the end thereof.

Quorum of the Assembly

31. The presence of at least twenty Members of the Assembly shall be necessary to constitute a convention of the Assembly for the exercise of its powers, and for that purpose the Speaker shall be reckoned as a Member.

Voting in the Assembly

32. Unless provisioned otherwise by this Act, questions arising in the Assembly shall be decided by a majority of voices other than that of the Speaker, and when the voices are equal, not otherwise, the Speaker shall have a vote.

Bills from the Assembly

33. Bills of any nature shall originate in the Assembly.

Recommendation of money votes

34. It shall not be lawful for the Assembly to adopt or pass any vote, resolution, address, or bill for the appropriation of any part of the public revenue, or any monetary demand from students, to any purpose that has not been first recommended to the Assembly by the Faculty or the Senate in the session in which such vote, resolution, address, or bill is proposed.

Disallowance by the Senate

35. Where the Assembly passes a bill in its own name and authority, it shall by the first convenient opportunity send an authentic copy of the Act to the Senate, for voting of the bill at a reasonable pace according to the temporal nature thereof, or for withholding its duties by declaring contempt for the bill, in which case the bill is returned to the Assembly, for no more than twice of a bill with the same intent in a fiscal quarter.

Supremacy of the Assembly

36. Where the Senate declares contempt for a bill of the same intent for more than twice, the Assembly may present the bill to the Principal for his Assent as if the Senate voted in favour, only if the Assembly votes in favour of the bill, and also votes in contempt of the Senate, with more than two-thirds of the total number of Members voting for the motions therein.

Assent to bills, etc.

37. Where a bill passed by the Legislature is presented to the Principal for his Assent, he shall declare, according to his discretion, but subject to the provisions of this Act, either that he assents thereto, or that he withholds his Assent, in his own name and authority.

Legislative authority of the Legislature

38. It shall be lawful for the Principal, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and the Assembly, to make laws in the form of Acts for the peace, order, and good student government of Korolev Senior, in relation to all matters not coming within the classes of subjects by this Act assigned exclusively to the Faculty; and for greater certainty, but not so as to restrict the generality of the foregoing terms of this section, it is hereby declared that (notwithstanding anything in this Act) the exclusive legislative authority of the Legislature extends to all matters coming within the classes of subjects next hereinafter enumerated; that is to say,

(a). public debt, assets and property;

(b). the raising of money by any mode or system of taxation;

(c). the borrowing of money on public credit;

(d). public morals, order and defence;

(e). student welfare, insurance and life services;

(f). school-wide events;

(g). student organizations and functions, events, or occasions thereof;

(h). the constitution of classes with respect to students;

(i). intellectual property;

(j). school facilities;

(k). functions under the rules of the Class Wars;

Constitution of the Council of Six

39. There shall be a Council of Six, consisting of one student from each of: Class 3-A; Class 3-B; Class 3-C; Class 3-D; Class 3-E; Class 3-F, each thereof are styled as Judges.

Appointment and tenure of Judges

40. At their pleasure, the Senate shall appoint the Judges of the Council of Six, whom shall not hold any other public office while appointed as Judges.

General Court

41. The Student Council may, notwithstanding anything in this Act, from time to time provide for the constitution, maintenance, and organization of a general court for the better administration of the laws of Korolev Senior.

Funding

42. All revenues over which the Legislature have power of appropriation shall form one consolidated revenue fund in the Department of the Treasury, to be appropriated for the public service of Korolev Senior in the manner and subject to the charges in this Act provided.

Expenses of collection, etc.

43. The Department of the Treasury shall be permanently charged with the costs, charges, and expenses incident to the collection, management, and receipt thereof.

Property, etc.

44. The Student Liaison Office shall be permanently charged with the maintenance and the good housekeeping of public property and facilities as pertains to the students thereof.

Oath of allegiance, etc.

45. Every Member of the Assembly shall before taking his seat therein take and subscribe before the Faculty, the oath of allegiance contained in the First Schedule to this Act.

Rights and freedoms in Korolev Senior

46. The constitution guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.

Fundamental freedoms

47. Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms:

(a). freedom of conscience and religion;

(b). freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of communication;

(c). freedom of peaceful assembly;

(d). freedom of association.

Democratic rights of citizens

48. Every student of Korolev Senior has the right to vote in an election of the Student Council President, or of any public office in which an election the general electorate is to be held for, and is qualified for such a position amenable to the term length thereof.

Maximum duration of public offices

49. No assembly, committee, body or other public office shall continue for longer than the school year it has been elected or appointed to.

Continuity of allegiance

50. Every holder of any public office must do so with allegiance to his class, and where that is no longer true the public office is relinquished.

Sitting of legislative bodies

51. There shall be a sitting of the Assembly at least once every month.

Mobility rights

52. Every student has the right to enter, remain in and leave the grounds of Korolev Senior.

Hierarchal mobility rights

53. Every student has the right to move to and take up residence in any class, provided that the student has been granted assent by and obtained scores of qualified examinations amenable to the teacher thereof.

Life, liberty and security of person

54. Every student has the right to life, liberty and security of person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.

Search or seizure

55. Every student has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure.

Detention or imprisonment

56. Every student has the right not to be arbitrarily detained or imprisoned.

Arrest or detention

57. Every student has the right on arrest or detention: to be informed promptly of the reasons therefor; to retain and instruct counsel without delay and to the informed of that right; to have the validity of the detention determined by way of hapeas corpus and to be released if the detention is not lawful.

Proceedings in criminal and penal matters

58. Any person charged with an offence has the right:

(a). to be informed without reasonable delay of the specific offence;

(b). to be tried within a reasonable time;

(c). not to be compelled to be a witness in proceedings against that person in respect of the offence;

(d). to be presumed innocent until proven guilty according to law in a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal;

(e). not to be denied reasonable bail without just cause;

(f). not to be found guilty on account of any act or omission unless, at the time of the act or omission, it constituted an offence under the law;

(g). if finally acquitted of the offence, not to be tried for it again and, if finally found guilty and punished for the offence, not to be tried or punished for it again;

(h). if found guilty of the offence and if the punishment of the office has been varied between the time of commission and the time of sentencing, to the benefit of the lesser punishment.

Cruel punishment

59. Everyone has the right not to be subjected to any cruel and unusual treatment or punishment.

No self-crimination

60. A witness who testifies in any proceedings has the right not to have any incriminating evidence so given used to incriminate that witness in any other proceedings, except in a prosecution for perjury or for the giving of contradictory evidence.

Interpreter

61. A party or witness in any proceedings who does not understand or speak the language in which the proceedings are conducted or who is deaf has the right to the assistance of an interpreter.

Equality before and under law

62. Every individual is equal before and under the law and has the right to equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination of any kind, including but not limited to discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age, disabilities, socioeconomic status, political affiliations.

Official languages

63. Old Yue and New Yue are the official languages of Korolev Senior and have equality of status and equal rights and privileges as to their use throughout, including student institutions.

Languages in the Assembly

64. Everyone has the right to use Old Yue or New Yue in any debates and other proceedings of the Assembly.

Languages in public records

65. Public records, documents or other methods of communication from the Student Government of any form shall be printed in Old Yue and New Yue, and both language versions are equally authoritative.

Languages in public service

66. Any member of the public has the right to communicate with, and to receive available services from, any office of an institution of the Student Government in Old Yue or New Yue.

Enforcement of guaranteed rights

67. Anyone whose rights or freedoms have been infringed or denied may apply to a court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the court considers appropriate and just in the circumstances, and where a court concludes that evidence was obtained in a manner that infringed or denied any rights or freedoms, the evidence shall be excluded where the admission of it would bring the administration of justice into disrepute.

Recognizing multiculturalism

68. The laws shall be interpreted in a manner consistent with the preservation and enhancement of the multicultural heritage of the students.

Exception by the Legislature

69. The Legislature or the Faculty may expressly declare in an Act of the Assembly, that the Act or a provision thereof shall operate notwithstanding Articles 54 through to 62, where the application thereof shall cease to have effect at the end of the school year.

Great majority of the Assembly for exceptions

70. An Act of the Assembly in part or in whole containing provisions operating notwithstanding Articles 54 through to 62 shall only be an Act after voted for with more than two-thirds of the total number of Members.

Commitment to an ideal school life

71. Without altering the legislative authority of the Legislature, or the rights of any of them with respect to the exercise of their legislative authority, the Student Government is committed to:

(a). promoting equal opportunities for the well-being of students;

(b). promoting extracurricular activities to the benefit of social awareness;

(c). providing essential public services of reasonable quality to all students.

Amendment procedure

72. A general amendment to the Constitution, in relation to all matters not coming within the subject classes provisioned elsewhere in this Act where the amendment procedure is declared to be different, shall be made by Proclamation of the Faculty or by the Principal where so alone or recommended by: resolutions of the Legislature where more than two-thirds of the Assembly and more than two-thirds of the Senate voted for; and of the Class Representatives of all classes where more than two-thirds voted for, and those voted for represents more than two-thirds of the student population, where the passed resolutions shall be identical.

73. An amendment to the Constitution in relation to the following subject classes shall be made by Proclamation of the Faculty or by the Principal where so alone:

(a). Articles 1 through to 7;

(b). any rights, privileges, or similar thereto of the Faculty or of the Principal;

(c). any part of legislation of Acts with exceptions;

(d). Article 72;

(e). this part.

(f). Article 74;

74. An amendment to the Constitution in relation to the following subject classes shall be made by Proclamation of the Faculty or by the Principal where so alone or recommended by: resolutions of the Legislature where more than two-thirds of the Assembly and more than two-thirds of the Senate voted for; of the Class Representatives of all classes where more than two-thirds voted for, and those voted for represents more than two-thirds of the student population; and of the general student population where more than two-thirds voted for, where the passed resolutions shall be identical:

(a). the Rules of the Class Wars, or the Rules of the Game.

Revocation of authorization

75. A resolution for the purposes of amendment may be revoked at any time before the issue of a Proclamation authorized by it.

Primacy of the Constitution

76. The Constitution is the supreme law of Korolev Senior, and any law that is inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no force or effect.

Constitution of the Constitution

77. The Constitution comprises of this Act, the Schedules therewith, and any amendments thereof.

Nature of amendments

78. Amendments to the Constitution shall be made only in accordance with the authority contained in this Act.

Old Yue and New Yue versions

79. Where any portion of the Constitution has been or is enacted in Old Yue or New Yue, the Old Yue and New Yue versions of that portion of the Constitution are equally authoritative.

THE FIRST SCHEDULE

OATH OF ALLEGIANCE

I, A.B. do swear, that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to Eternia, and to uphold the values and principles of Korolev Senior Secondary School.

Treaty of peace between Class 3-A and Class 3-F for the settlement on the question of the restoration of the conventional class order (August 1887, a.k.a. the Alice Protocol)

Of the participants of the exalted Class Wars of Korolev Senior Secondary School;

With Class 3-A, of the one part; and Class 3-F, of the other part;

Whereas on the request of Lady Eterna an armistice was granted to the parties on the morning of 29 August 1887, during the time of second period, in order that a treaty of peace may be concluded, and;

Whereas the parties are equally desirous that the war in which the objective of restoring order was delivered to Class 3-F by Class 3-A in an effort to achieve so, should be replaced by a firm, just, and durable peace.

For this purpose, the parties have appointed as their plenipotentiaries to discuss, settle, and sign the present treaty of peace, namely;


Class 3-A:

Mr Gilbert Paul de Lafayette, Class 3-A Representative, Member of the Assembly, Marshal of the Public Safety Committee;

Ms Mona Serine Mackenzie, Member of the Assembly, Chairwoman of the Activity Council;

Class 3-F:

Mr Kato Abel Danubius, Class 3-F Representative, Member of the Assembly;

Mr Eon Atelier Koziko, Member of the Assembly;

And together with the witnesses to the treaty in order to affirm the legislative authority of the present treaty of peace, namely;

The student council executives:

Ms Ganymede Bianca Jupiter, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Member of the Assembly;

Ms Europa Ariel Jupiter, Undersecretary, Member of the Assembly;

Ms Io Scarlett Jupiter, Executive Manager, Member of the Assembly;

The Faculty:

Mr Alan Jeremy Guilford-Fong, Class 3-A homeroom teacher, senator;

Ms Elizabeth Miklos Romana, Class 3-F homeroom teacher, senator;


Who having exchanged their full powers, found to be in good and due form, have agreed as follows:

From the coming into force of the present treaty the state of war will terminate;

And the acceptance in full of the following articles of peace, with the same authority of an Act of the Assembly;


ARTICLE I.

That peace between Class 3-A and Class 3-F is extended to at least the end of the current year of the Candoran Calendar (i.e. 1887), when the parties will renegotiate the length of said extension, or the termination of this Article.

ARTICLE II.

Where Class 3-A must relinquish their claim to the cause for war that was claimed for the war which this treaty of peace is providing for.

ARTICLE III.

Where Class 3-A must restrict their aggression, that they cannot declare war on an ally of Class 3-F while the provisions in Article I continue to be applied.

ARTICLE IV.

In light of the circumstances that developed on the eve of war, in which with almost certainty that, directly or indirectly, resulted in a state of war between Class 3-A and Class 3-F, that in the context of said circumstances neither party is to be pursued by the other in any capacity for any purposes, including but not limited to extraordinary retribution or conflict.

ARTICLE V.

Class 3-A agrees to transfer exactly ten points to Class 3-F.

ARTICLE VI.

Class 3-A agrees to transfer Ms Alice Sonora Westgrove to Class 3-F, following all appropriate procedures and protocols of a class transfer.

ARTICLE VII.

Of their respective class constituencies, Class 3-A agrees to transfer two seats in the Assembly to Class 3-F, where the respective outgoing and incoming Members for the transferred seats shall be determined at a later date but no later than the next convention of the Assembly.


The present treaty in all, of which the Old Yue text is authoritative, shall be ratified and enter into force without delay.

The instrument of ratification is provided by the witnesses to this treaty.

The present treaty shall be regarded as having entered into force pending the administrative discretion of the provision of the instrument of ratification.

In faith thereof the above named plenipotentiaries and witnesses have signed the present treaty.

Done at the Assembly Hall, Korolev Senior Secondary School, on 29 August 1887 of the Candoran Calendar.


For Class 3-A

For Class 3-F

For the student council executives

For the Faculty

Rules of the Game

The Class Wars shall be conducted according to the Rules of the Game as outlined below.

  1. Point system.
    1. At the beginning of the year, point allotment is as follows:
      • A: 60.
      • B: 50.
      • C: 40.
      • D: 30.
      • E: 20.
      • F: 10.
      • Others: 0.
    2. Total points across all classes at any given time are 210 points.
    3. There is a minimum of 0 points for any party.
  2. Declaration of war.
    1. A declaration of war must be made to the parties involved.
    2. A declaration of war must be presented with a casus belli acceptable to the Principal.
    3. Alliances, if there are any, cannot be broken during the relevant war.
    4. A war with alliances present cannot involve single parties, i.e. a party consisting of only one class.
    5. Upon declaration, all able bodies from parties involved are mobilized immediately.
    6. Standard Diploma students are entitled to conscientious objection.
    7. A war is begun with the announcement of commencement from the Principal.
  3. Warfare.
    1. Any form of alchemy or magic is strictly forbidden.
    2. Fatal, near fatal or lasting physical injury is strictly forbidden.
    3. Cleanse tags are required for participation in the war.
    4. Forced or unwanted removal of cleanse tags will immediately disqualify both participants from the current war, followed by arbitration by a Supervisor.
    5. Non-participants’ cleanse tags are not saturated, and are forbidden to interfere with the war.
  4. Duels.
    1. Supervisors will arbitrate Duels, and the rules of the Duel will be determined by the Supervisor.
    2. The Supervisor will determine the rules of the duel, including but not limited to the form of competition and cleanse tag energy losses.
    3. Unless otherwise stated by the Supervisor, only the selected can participate and represent in the Duel.
    4. After taking a loss of cleanse tag energy, the losing party is entitled to having him/herself swapped out for an ally.
    5. Any interference is an automatic loss for the offending party, unless it is from neither party, then it is up to the arbitrator.
  5. Ending a war.
    1. The last remaining Class Representative whose cleanse tag have yet to reach full saturation becomes the winning party.
    2. Class Representatives who are the war leaders can issue a surrender for their entire alliance.
    3. The Principal, or the delegated authority for the Principal, can arbitrate the end of a war. The result will be arbitrated by said person, and is automatically enforced with or without peace negotiations.
    4. Supervisors and Student Council Members of parties not involved in the relevant war can also invoke the powers described in 5.3 if there is foul play beyond reasonable doubt.
  6. Peace terms.
    1. Peace terms will be negotiated by the parties involved.
    2. Peace terms made must be endorsed by the Supervisors.
    3. Peace terms, when agreed upon, are legally binding.
    4. Peace terms negotiations and proceedings are arbitrated by the Student Council Executives and Supervisors.
  7. Outside of war.
    1. A party cannot declare war on another party that they were at war with for less than fourteen days ago. These terms can be extended, but not shortened, in negotiating peace terms.
    2. Conscription of lower year students within the same class allocation:
      1. Conscription can only occur once every two months.
      2. Standard Diploma students under conscription are entitled to conscientious objection.
      3. Conscripted students are handed fresh cleanse tags each time.
    3. Rules of the Game cannot be overturned in any circumstance outside of the Rules of the Game.
    4. Class Representatives are entitled to have their cleanse tags de-saturated prior to and after a war.
    5. Participants of the war are entitled to have their cleanse tags partially de-saturated after the war, up to ten percent.
    6. All are entitled to de-saturation of the cleanse tag at the beginning of every month.
  8. Winning the game.
    1. At the end of the year, the party with the most points win.
    2. In the event of a tie, a final showdown is initiated, with forced conscription, exempting rule 7.2.1.
    3. The winning prize is obtaining the Standard Diploma in place of the People’s Diploma for all those applicable, and a 40 point increase in their final scores, spread across their subjects with the lowest scores. In addition, their names and class photo will be engraved and hung respectively on the Wall of Victory in the West Hall.